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The mass media in Iraq includes print, radio, television, and online services. Iraq became the first Arab country to broadcast from a TV station, in 1954 [1]. As of 2020, more than 100 radio stations and 150 television stations were broadcasting to Iraq in Arabic, English, Kurdish, Turkmen, and Neo-Aramaic.
A second TV channel was established on 30 July 1972 broadcasting on channel 7 in the Baghdad area. [5] The channel was renamed Youth Channel ( Qanaat Al-Shabaab ) on 17 July 1993 and broadcast subtitled Western movies and music videos before the 2003 invasion.
There are 22 free-to-air satellite channels headquartered in Lebanon. [4] There is one government-owned television channel, Tele Liban, which was established in 1959. [4] Several TV channels are politically affiliated, and political parties are an important source of funding. [4]
www.tvbaghdad.tv: Baghdad Satellite Channel is a terrestrial television network in Iraq. [1] [2] [3] References External links. Iraq portal ...
The first Kurdish newspaper titled Kurdistan, was published in Cairo in 1898. Since then tens of different Kurdish newspapers, magazines and journals have been published in Ottoman Empire, Iraq, Armenia, Syria, Lebanon and Iran and in recent years in Turkey, Germany, Sweden and France.
Hawlati (Iraqi Kurdistan) Iraq Today (English) Iraq World ; Iraqi News (iraqinews.com) Karbala News ; Ktabat (kitabat.com) The Kurdish Globe; Renwen (Khanaqin, Iraqi Kurdistan) Rozhnama (Iraqi Kurdistan) SOMA Digest (English) Sot al-Iraq (sotaliraq.com) Xebat
'Baghdad Television Station') (BTV) or known as Iraqi TV (Arabic: التلفزيون العراقي, romanized: altilfizyun aleiraqiu, lit. 'Iraqi Television') was the first Iraqi television channel which was in operation from 2 May 1956 until 13 April 2003 after the fall of Baghdad .
It was recognized as an official governorate of the Kurdistan Region in 2014, [3] [2] and the Council of Ministers approved a bill twice in 2013, [4] [5] and 2023. [6] However, the only legislature in Iraq that can implement new governorates is the Council of Representatives of Iraq , which has had delayed hearings regarding Halabja numerous times.